IT IS A CHESSE CAKE ON THE KEYBOARD IT IS A CHESSE CAKE ON THE KEYBOARD no itz amandas feet on the keyboard
it is the chesse vanilla on the keyboard
On a standard QWERTY keyboard, the "divide" function is represented by a forward slash ( "/" ). It usually shares the same key as the question mark ( "?" ), or can be found by itself on the number pad.
It is because the qwerty keyboard is used universally. Most people are used to the qwerty keyboard layout but there are some keyboard layout that you can also consider the devorak and colemak
Right next to the question mark key on an American qwerty keyboard
It is called a QWERTY keyboard because of the first 6 letters on your keyboard. Look at your keyboard and look at the first six letters at the top. It will be 'qwerty' hence the name.
The standard "QWERTY" keyboard has Q as the first key in the letter section.
Yes, it has a virtual QWERTY keyboard on the front touch screen and also flips open sideways to reveal a QWERTY keyboard.
Alphanumeric keys, Punctuation keys, Special Keys, Alt key, Arrow Keys, Backspace keys, Caps Lock Key, Ctrl Key, Delete Key, Enter key, Esc key, Function Key.
The QWERTY keyboard got its name from the first 6 keys from left to right next to the tab key. The earliest known use of QWERTY keyboards dates back to typewriters in 1874. In 2012 that makes QWERTY keyboards around 138 years old.
Infinity is not a standard feature on a Qwerty board, but many progams such as MS Word have a special function that allow you to insert nonstandard keyboard symbols like infinity.In addition with most applications if you hold down the 'Alt' key and type the number 236 it will display the infinity symbol. ∞
QWERTY keyboard layouts can vary slightly depending on the language for which it was made. Most QWERTY keyboards have three rows of letters, a row of numbers at the top, a spacebar key at the bottom, two shift keys, two control keys, two alt keys, and enter key, a backspace key, a tab key, and a caps lock key.
There are three patterns I know about, Azerty, Qwerty, and Dvorak, are close together (well, atleast Azerty and Qwerty) Azerty and Qwerty are practically the same. The only difference is that on a Azerty keyboard Azerty are the letters available to type on the top row on the left side, where as for Qwerty , Qwerty is the available to type in on the top right section. In Qwerty A and Z are right next to the caps lock and the (left) shift key. In Azerty Q is next to the bottom left shift key and W is next to the ,/< key. In Dvorak the five vowels are on the left side of the keyboard on the middle row and the five most commonly used consonants are on the left side. The ,/< , ./> and / or ? is on the upper left corner.
keyboard hehehe